"I think Mexico could get done here yet this month," Bednarski said. "They were hoping maybe even yet this week. I'm going to say expect this month to have Mexico wrapped up in NAFTA. But just Mexico."

And Canada will not be the next agreement reached, he added.

"Japan is waiting in line to get done," he said. "They want to move on that one, because that one is pretty much done. ... After that, Canada should come in line.

"And China, from what we're hearing, don't expect anything soon," he added. "Don't expect anything this year. Probably won't be even next year. This could be a two- or three-year process before we wrap up something with China."

Cramer recently had a conversation with Ted McKinney, Undersecretary of Agriculture for Trade and Foreign Agricultural Affairs.

"He wanted to spend more time talking about NAFTA than he did the EU (European Union) ... We've got issues there, too."

Cramer reported that a deal with Mexico is close, but officials will have to get Canada to the table before the final NAFTA agreement is reached.

Cramer also addressed the $12 billion farm bailout recently announced by the Trump administration.

"That $12 billion is supposed to sort of heal all the wounds that the tariff mess created," he said. "... $12 billion isn't enough. We're too small of an industry. It gets gobbled up by the big industries like milk and pork and soybeans."

"... Because there isn't a good mechanism for paying dollars out to the dry bean industry," Cramer added, "We're seeing them (the government) in the market buying dry beans. Part of that $12 billion Band-Aid is, essentially, 'We're going to buy enough beans to try to put a floor in this market, to try to prop the market up.'"

"The U.S. government is our customer," he said. "So in the big picture, we do want to get back to business with the EU ... The farmers in the great state of Michigan support the administration ... for the most part ... but there's a little clock ticking, so don't drag your feet. Let's get this negotiation moving ..."

He noted that with current trade and market conditions, it will be hard to regain customers who find other suppliers.

"When you lose a customer like that ... It will be hard to get them back," he said.

"All I hear is Michigan quality, it's above anything else," he added.

"The domestic opportunities for black beans are going very well," Wisenbaugh said. "Central America, we've got a lot of business down there. They're very dry too right now. That could open up some opportunities there."

"We have a lot of opportunities, right now, in Mexico," he added. "That's our hot landing spot right now."

Bednarksi said soybean farmers will get $1.65 per bushel for production.

"They're doing the numbers," he said. "They want to get it out in early September, but it's going to be based on your actual production.